Washington Class Action Suit Refocused on Lloyd Ward and Meracord

Back in July a class action lawsuit was filed against Meracord (formerly NoteWorld) and Lloyd Ward, the Dallas debt settlement attorney who has sued my wife and I. The first compliant filed was a bit meandering and did not focus that much on the activities of Ward and his debt settlement companies.

It appears the filing attorneys and firms have gone back to work and assembled a number of issues that focus their complaint more specifically on Ward and Meracord in an amended complaint filed yesterday in Washington State.

This class action lawsuit was filed by the firms of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro, LLP and The Paynter Law Firm, PLLC. Steve@hbsslaw.com, toml@hbsslaw.com, cboyd@smplegal.com, and stuart@smplegal.com.

Defendants

Meracord Defendants

Defendant Meracord, LLC (“Meracord”) is a Delaware limited liability company with its principal place of business in Tacoma, Washington. According to its Sign-Up Agreement, Meracord “is in the business of providing transaction management and processing services and certain related services as an independent third party,” and its website touts its aim “to be the most respected 3rd party payment service provider in the world, where there is a written promise that dictates the responsible and accurate treatment of the payment.”

Defendant Meracord was formerly known as NoteWorld. After a number of class action lawsuits were filed against NoteWorld, the company changed its name to Meracord. Frequent name changes are a common tactic in the debt settlement industry. By changing names, companies in the debt settlement industry are able to wipe clean their online reputations virtually overnight, making it more difficult for consumers to associate the company with the lawsuits and other negative consumer feedback. In this Complaint, Plaintiffs refer to “Meracord,” although most of the events described herein took place when the company was called “NoteWorld.”

Defendant Linda Remsberg (“Remsberg”) is the Owner, President, and CEO of Defendant Meracord. Remsberg acquired Meracord in 2007, having worked for the company for approximately nine years prior to that, primarily in the company’s Seller Finance business unit. As President/CEO, Remsberg oversaw the creation of Meracord’s Debt Settlement business unit, which now generates over 70% of the company’s revenues. Remsberg oversaw the creation of the Meracord Enterprise and, in conjunction with the principals and owners of the Front DSC’s described above, Remsberg continues to conduct and/or participate in the conduct of the Meracord Enterprise’s unlawful activities.

Remsberg maintains an official blog on the Meracord website that disingenuously touts Meracord’s purported belief in “consumer protection.” Examples of Remsberg’s blatantly false and misleading descriptions of Meracord and its business practices include:

None of these things are true. The truth is that after being purchased by Remsberg, Meracord was transformed from a company whose business was devoted almost exclusively to processing payments for private mortgages into a company whose major business involves preying on financially vulnerable consumers by creating the mechanism by which scores of dubious “debt-settlement” companies can easily obtain direct payments from victims’ bank accounts. In that manner, Meracord deliberately supports, facilitates and participates in the criminal conduct described below.

Defendant Charles Remsberg is a resident of Washington and the spouse of Defendant Linda Remsberg. At all times, Defendant Linda Remsberg was acting on behalf of her marital community with Defendant Charles Remsberg with respect to the misconduct alleged herein.

Lloyd Ward Defendants

Defendant Lloyd E. Ward (“Ward”) is an attorney licensed to practice in the state of Texas. He owns and/or controls a byzantine web of corporate entities. These entities include those listed below, all of which, upon information and belief, operate in association with (or under the name) “Lloyd Ward & Associates.” According to its website, LWA is a law firm established in 1992 and located in Dallas, Texas. In addition to other practice areas, the firm publicizes a Debt Settlement practice and touts its “relationships with creditors” who “realize that we are working as diligently as they are to negotiate a debt settlement and remove it from their books.” LWA’s website falsely advertises that its debt negotiation service is “guaranteed in writing to work or your fees will be returned!” At all times, Lloyd Ward was acting on behalf of his marital community with Amanda Glen Ward with respect to the misconduct alleged herein.

Defendant Amanda Glen Ward is a resident of Texas, the spouse of Lloyd Ward, and the Director of Marketing for LWA and its associated entities. Amanda Ward has the authority to handle and disburse the funds, described below, received by Lloyd Ward Defendants from the Meracord Enterprise. Amanda Ward has participated in, ratified or aided and/or abetted all the unlawful practices alleged herein to have been committed by Lloyd Ward Defendants.

Specifically, she has directed and/or participated in the fraudulent solicitation of class members and the transmission over interstate lines of unlawfully obtained funds. In addition, Defendant Amanda Ward has permitted her family trust, the Glen Family Trust, to be used to hide her and her husband’s ill-gotten gains. At all times, Amanda Ward was acting on behalf of her marital community with Lloyd Ward with respect to the misconduct alleged herein.

Defendant Lloyd Ward, P.C. is a Texas professional corporation located in Dallas, Texas. Ward serves as the sole Director, President, and registered agent for Lloyd Ward, P.C. Upon information and belief, Lloyd Ward, P.C. also does business as Lloyd Ward Group, LLC.

Defendant Lloyd Ward & Associates, P.C. is a Texas professional corporation located in Dallas, Texas. The registered agent for Lloyd Ward & Associates, P.C. is Lloyd Ward, P.C., with both entities using identical addresses. Ward serves as President of Lloyd Ward & Associates, P.C. Upon information and belief, Lloyd Ward & Associates P.C. also does business as Lloyd Ward Group, LLC.

Defendant The Lloyd Ward Group, P.C. is a Texas professional corporation located in Dallas, Texas. Defendant Lloyd Ward, P.C. serves as the company’s registered agent, and Ward serves as CEO, Director, and President of The Lloyd Ward Group, P.C. The Lloyd Ward Group, P.C. also operates under the assumed name Lloyd Ward Group II. The certificate of formation states that its purpose is to engage in “legal services and other services ancillary thereto.” Even though The Lloyd Ward Group PC is a law firm purportedly engaged in the practice of law, it shares profits with a non-lawyer. Specifically, it is 42.5% owned by Kevin Devoto, 42.5% owned by Lloyd Regner and 15% owned by Lloyd Ward. Mr. Devoto is a convicted felon who served 18 months for his involvement in a prior fraud and is currently subject to a $2,185,476.29 restitution order. Neither Mr. Regner nor Mr. Devoto are licensed attorneys in Texas, or, on information and belief, in any other state.

Ward Holdings, Inc. is a Texas corporation located in Dallas, Texas. Ward serves as the company’s registered agent, President and Director. The company’s charter was involuntarily forfeited in February 2012 for failure to comply with the Texas Tax Code.

Defendant Settlement Compliance Commission Inc. is a Texas corporation located in Dallas, TX. Defendant Lloyd Ward & Associates, P.C. serves as the company’s registered agent, and both companies are located at the same Dallas address. Ward serves as a Director of the company, along with two other individuals: Mike Miles and Chris Garrison. Mr. Miles also serves as the Manager of SilverLeaf Debt Solutions, LLC, one of the other entities that was involved in Plaintiff Marie Johnson-Peredo’s Meracord transactions. The relationship between Ward and Mr. Miles/SilverLeaf served as the basis for a disciplinary petition brought by the State Bar of Texas against Ward for various violations of the Texas Rules of Professional Conduct.

Collectively, Lloyd Ward, Amanda Ward and the Lloyd Ward entities described above are referred to below as LWA or Lloyd Ward Defendants. The above entities represent only some of the numerous entities created by Ward for his unlawful activity. Lloyd Ward Defendants constantly generate new entities in order to evade regulatory enforcement, avoid paying bills and escape litigation by and liability to their victims. As Lloyd Ward himself candidly explained in a September 2010 email to his business partner (and convicted felon) Kevin Devoto: “A new entity has certain advantages, as it is clean with no baggage or potential baggage (i.e. no chance of any suite [sic] for past issues). . . . I would strongly recommend we set up the new company as all of the existing companies have the potential for some type of litigation be it wages/labor law, employment claims, client claims, ect [sic] . . . .”

Facts

The Meracord Enterprise

In order to vastly grow its customer base, while shielding itself from the scrutiny and complaints of those it defrauds, Meracord – at the direction of Defendant Linda Remsberg – partners with an elaborate network of Front DSCs. Meracord uses the Front DSC network to sign up desperate and unsuspecting consumers who are looking for relief from the overwhelming stress of their indebtedness.

Typically, a consumer will sign up with a Front DSC representing itself as a single company engaged in the business of debt settlement. Front DSCs seek customers through unsolicited phone calls, email, or mail, as well as internet, television and radio advertising claiming to offer relief for consumers saddled with overwhelming debt.

Only later, if ever, does the consumer discover that there are multiple companies involved in the process. The relationships between the various companies are purposefully obscured to prevent the consumer from disentangling the complicated scheme.

With Meracord’s and Remsberg’s knowledge and approval, its Front DSCs uniformly and falsely represent to the consumer that Meracord is an independent, unbiased “payment processing” company. Meracord itself and Remsberg herself affirm these misrepresentations and uniformly and falsely hold Meracord out to consumers as completely “independent” from its Front DSCs and as “objective.” In fact, there exist close relationships between Meracord and its network of Front DSCs:

(b) Meracord invites select Front DSC’s to join its “VIP Club” and provides these Front DSC’s with free industry research and free analyses of their “consumer portfolio[s];”

(c) Meracord treats major debt relief sales channels to VIP events;

(d) Meracord provides the software through which customers enrolled by the Front DSCs monitor their escrow accounts and approve creditor settlements – in the relatively rare circumstances that such settlements actually occur;

(e) Meracord’s profits are dependent on increasing the number of debt settlement customers signed up by the Front DSCs because each such customer is also required to sign-up for Meracord’s services;

(f) Despite Meracord’s express representation that the Front DSCs do not act as its “agents,” the Front DSCs act under Meracord’s direction and control when they provide customers with “Sign-Up Agreements” on its behalf;

(g) Despite Meracord’s express representation that it does not act as an “agent” for its Front DSCs, Meracord in fact processes automatic withdrawals from customer bank accounts and distributes unlawful debt settlement fees back to the Front DSCs – all supposedly pursuant to dubious “agreements” between the Front DSCs and customers and, upon information and belief, according to express agreements between Meracord and the Front DSCs;

(h) Meracord is deeply intertwined with the Front DSCs. Remsberg, on behalf of Meracord, often attends debt settlement industry events, where she serves on panels alongside representatives of the Front DSCs, and, upon information and belief, describes Meracord and the Front DSCs as engaged in the joint endeavor of recruiting debt settlement customers.

(i) For example, in April 2011, Remsberg attended a conference of The Association of Settlement Companies (“TASC,” which shortly thereafter changed its name to the American Fair Credit Council). At the TASC conference, Remsberg served on a panel with four other panelists – all four of whom represented Front DSCs. One of the panelists was Andrew Housser, CEO of Freedom Debt Relief, a Front DSC involved in the scam that injured Plaintiff Dinah Canada, and which at the time had already been investigated by the Washington State Attorney General’s office for violations of Washington consumer protection laws (discussed in further detail below).

(ii) During the panel discussion at the TASC conference, on information and belief, Remsberg referred to her company and the Front DSCs as part of a joint endeavor, saying that “[our customers] feel we are better at negotiating than they are. That’s why they sign up with us,” and advising that business success for the endeavor depends on “who we are enrolling” and “how fast are we delivering results.”

The standardized contracts provided to consumers by the Front DSCs contain, at the very least, an agreement for debt settlement services as well as a Meracord “Sign-Up Agreement,” and often contain a myriad of other confusingly worded forms.

The debt settlement programs provided for by these agreements universally involve the following material elements:

(a) The consumer agrees to pay specified debt settlement fees that, unbeknownst to the consumer, are illegal and per se unfair, but generate large profits for the Meracord Enterprise;

(b) In addition to the debt settlement fees, Meracord charges the consumer unlawful fees to maintain and manage the trust account necessary for the operation of the debt settlement program;

(c) The debt settlement account is established for the purported purpose of accumulating funds with which to pay the settlements ostensibly to be negotiated by the Front DSCs;

(e) The program’s success and the consumer’s ability to financially afford the monthly debt settlement program payments generally presupposes that the consumer does not make further payments of his/her own on the outstanding and now further defaulting debt;

(f) Meracord is also authorized to automatically and periodically debit the debt settlement account to pay the exorbitant debt settlement fees specified in the debt settlement agreement and “Sign-Up Agreement;”

(g) The fees usually entirely consume consumers’ monthly debt settlement payments for the first months, if not years, of participation in the program, and substantially consume consumers’ monthly payments for the remainder of the debt settlement program;

(h) In almost all cases, the consumer would be far better off simply directing the monthly payments to his/her creditors directly, thereby saving the fees illegally, unfairly and deceptively extracted by the Meracord Enterprise, and preventing the further accumulation of compounded interest.

The contracts used by the Front DSCs, in addition to charging illegal fees, contain false, misleading, and illegal statements. For example, the contracts, along with the claims made by the Front DSCs’ salespeople, often

(a) Mislead customers into thinking that the debt settlement process will be handled by attorneys, or are “backed by” law firms; (b) Fail to disclose with appropriate specificity the nature of the fees to be charged and when such fees will be incurred;

(c) Make false and/or misleading claims about the “success rates” of the programs;

(d) Make false and/or misleading statements about the length of time it will take to complete the program;

(e) Make false or misleading promises about the percentage of the customer’s debt that the company will be able to settle; and

(f) Make false or misleading statements about the factors that affect the customer’s credit score and the impact of the debt settlement program on that score.

Moreover, the Front DSCs’ salespeople often pressure consumers into signing (or “esigning”) the contracts quickly, without any meaningful opportunity to review the terms; and for their part, the contract terms are often so confusingly worded as to be unintelligible to the average consumer.

Meracord Defendants know that the contracts used by its Front DSCs are fraudulent and illegal, but Meracord still continues to process payments according to the terms of those contracts. Meracord Defendants’ knowledge is self-evident, as

(a) Meracord processes payments pursuant to the contracts used by its Front DSCs, giving it direct knowledge of the fraudulent and illegal nature of those contracts;

(b) Meracord has produced copies of the contracts in this litigation demonstrating that it has the unlawful contracts in its possession;

(c) Meracord Defendants – as well as Lloyd Ward Defendants – are acutely aware of the enormous volume of consumer complaints regarding these fraudulent contracts and the false claims made to enroll consumers in debt settlement programs offered by the Meracord Enterprise. There are scores, if not hundreds, of consumer complaints on the Internet involving the scheme perpetrated by Meracord and its Front DSCs, including Lloyd Ward Defendants; and

(d) Meracord’s debt settlement “payment processing” business is characterized by astronomically high churn rates (canceled accounts as a percentage of active accounts). Meracord has internally determined that its churn rates invariably exceed 60% and on occasion have exceeded 70%. Remsberg is aware of these high churn rates, which are symptomatic of and thus reveal widespread fraud;

(e) Meracord is aware of regulatory enforcement actions against Front DSC’s with whom it does business, yet it takes no steps to cease doing business with these Front DSCs. To the contrary, it often unlawfully facilitates the transfer of accounts from Front DSC’s under investigation to new or other Front DSCs under common control in order to evade regulatory action.

Front DSCs tout their association with Meracord as proof of their bona fides and to convince consumers that they are legitimate providers of debt relief services.

The following are just a few examples of the complaints that consumers have posted on the Internet:

(a) “I am in a terrible debt situation, I used [Meracord] to help me get my debt collection off my back giving them $240.00 a month, now my situation has grown worst, and have paid them $480.00 I can’t keep my payments up with [Meracord], I never got any thing done from them and I asked for a refund and they said no, I felt like all my money went into helping my self get out of debt and now they have made it impossible for me to pay anybody now I am in a rut. Why can’t I get some of it back, not even $5.00 and they no longer want to help me. I just know that my creditors are still calling and I don’t know what to do.”

(b) “[Meracord] is doing business with Lloyd Ward Law Firm. Lloyd Ward Law Firm was suppose to settle my debt and 2 months have gone by and they have not settled any debts. Therefore, they breached their contract. [Meracord] does business with them (I believe they are run by the same person/people. They say they are an “independent” company). They made 2 deductions from my account and refuses to give the money back stating fees for services by LLoyd Ward.

They didn’t do anything for me as contracted. Yet, [Meracord] is refusing to refund the money. How independent is that? Just because you have a seperate Federal ID number, doesn’t mean you aren’t owned by the same people.

However, I will be filing complaints against both companies. DO NOT DO ANY BUSINESS WITH LLOYD WARD LAW FIRM OR [MERACORD]. THERE IS DISHONESTY BY BOTH. RESEARCH THEM ON THE NET. YOU FIND THERE ARE THE SAME TYPES OF COMPLAINTS AGAINST BOTH.”

(c) “I went to [Meracord] for help on lowering interest on credit cards and they started taking money out of my account every month in the amount of $376.38 and referred me to another company named attorney at law associates Lloyd ward firm for help on the credit cards. The Lloyd ward customers services employees don’t want to get in touch with the creditors over the phones, their way is over the mailing letters instead and not talking for the clients and keep taking my money of $376.38. I joined them in March the [Meracord] and the Lloyd wards for help. The account collected from me about three grand already and I just closed it on October 27, 2010 because the Lloyd wards and [Meracord] were taking my money and not helping us. . . . I tried to file a complaint online with the better business bureau and they want so much information, the money was being debit monthly out of my account. Why do I have to prove how crooked these companies are.”

(d) “This Company is a big Scam and I think a class action law suite should be started even if it take years to finish. I encouraged my mother and mother-inlaw to enroll and place my name as a contact to assist with both accounts. Me and my wife were providing financial support with the accounts, which my mother-in-law suddenly died last month and the company has had us fax documents as proof. We have sent death certificate, and power of attorney, but the company request q new document everytime because they don’t want to release the money that’s sitting in the trust account. Since the company appears to be a scam, I had my mother to cancel her account and all they refunded was $600 and paid off 1 debt in over a year after I provided a $216 payment to her for lloydward/[Meracord] every month.The second debt they claim to be paying an arrangement with has yet to receive the two $184 payments they claim to have paid. After all this, we didn’t discover the lies until my wife contacted them that her mother died and requested the funds that were in the trust account. Currently we are seeking an attorney to persue the lloydward firm for the mental anquish they are creating for my wife. At this point it’s not the small amount of money, but it’s the principal that they are scamming many people including the disabled elderly.”

(e) “Three years ago, I contracted the services of Clear Debt Solution to negotiate and reduce my credit card debt. Per the agreement, I made monthly payments to a third-party account for use in the debt settlement. Over $3000 was collected up front by CDS and [Meracord] Service Center, the party in control of my account. At the end of the program, for which I had contributed $317 per month for over two years, only one account was settled by CDS. When a second creditor sued, CDS did not respond to my requests for information in a timely manner. After I lost the suit, my account was wiped out, plus I had to pay more, to pay the court-ordered settlement. Three accounts remained unsettled. As I had made no payments nor attempts to communicate with the credit card companies, per my agreement with CDS, each balance had doubled over the two years. As I see it, these people made $3000 and I became deeper in debt than when I started.”

(f) “Lifeguard Financial is a fraud. They make claims that they can settle your debt for 50 cents on the dollar of your debt. They claim that they neogiate your debt with your creditors, a lie. The client does all the work contacting the creditors that Lifeguard is handling the clients debt. Lifeguard takes monthly payments from your checking account through a escrow agent, namely [Meracord]. The problem is most of all of your payments through [Meracord] go back to Lifeguard Financial as fees leaving little funds to accumulate to go towards the settlement with the creditors. I was in this program almost a year and found that little amount of my monthly payments were accumulating towards settlement. In another instance, I was threated with a lawsuit from one of my creditors, I was told by their legal department to respond to the court clerk sending me notice of the potential lawsuit which I also had to copy to the plaintiffs attorneys. Lifeguard is of no help. In additon the creditors explained to me that they refuse to deal with Lifeguard Financial. So what does that tell you. I will file a complaint with Florida’s attorney general. I don’t think that contacting BBB will get anywhere. I cancelled my contract with Lifeguard Financial and expected a cordial converstation and that they will refund of my monies that I paid them. Instead I got this “pitbull” whose name is “Robert” on the telephone that started screaming at me about cancelling the contract with threats of suing me. I ended up screaming back at him, needless to say at this point I out several thousand dollars. If there is a class action suit, I want to be part of it.”

(g) “Back in March of 2008 I entered into a contract for debt relief with ClearDebt Results. I first spoke with a Robert Till, then a Patrick Schlosser, then I was passed to James Callahan, then again to Tiffany Shrum, all who appear to no longer work at this company. This company has taken $1300 dollars from me, provided no service as they say they were going to and they have a comapny called [Meracord] Service Center continue to take $100 a month directly out of my check. I want answers as to why they aren’t taking care of these credit issues as they stated they would. None of these creditors have been paid and I continue to get harrassing phone calls.”

(h) “On 09/16/09, I signed a contract with Covenant Debt Solutions to have them settle my unsecured debt and credit card accounts. Covenant used the services of [Meracord] Service Center to deduct monies from my checking account to payoff my debt. [Meracord] began to deduct $535.74 on the 17th of each month, beginning on 10/17/2009. The monthly deduction included $390.93 for service fee, $14.50 for maintenance fee and $130.31 to be placed in my trust account. It was very difficult to speak to Covenant’s customer service department and I decided to cancel their services on 11/30/09. I spoke with “oscar” who stated my trust account funds would be mailed to me within 7-10 days and pursuant a phone call from Brian. I waited but no check was sent to me. I phoned Brian who stated that he was not in charge of approving issuance of any checks and that he would have a supervisor contact me. I never received a phone call from a Covenant supervisor. To this date, no check has been issued/received from Covenant or [Meracord]. I placed a stop payment with my bank to prevent [Meracord] to continue taking my monies.”

54. Instead of investigating these complaints and refusing to do business with the unsavory Front DSCs, Meracord – at the direction of Remsberg – devotes its energy to posting false and misleading rebuttals to these complaints. These rebuttals falsely claim:

(a) That Meracord is not a debt settlement company, despite the fact that its actions clearly fall under the statutory definition for such companies during the relevant time period of this complaint;

(b) That Meracord “takes on the payment servicing obligations as an independent and objective company and does not act at the direction of the [debt settlement companies],” despite the fact that Meracord withdraws fees from customer payments at the behest of its Front DSCs and then provides those fees to the Front DSCs;

(c) That it is “not contracted with” its Front DSCs, despite the fact that, on information and belief, Meracord and its Front DSCs enter into contracts related to the debt settlement programs administered by both entities;

(d) That it “follows the instructions stated in the Meracord contract and at no time acts without authorization from the consumer,” despite the fact that many times the contracts signed by consumers do not contain clear or specific schedules of when fees will be withdrawn, and thus Meracord’s withdrawal of fees must necessarily be the result of separate (unilateral) instructions from the Front DSCs.

55. Meracord perpetuates the fraud by making false and misleading statements of its own through its website, emails and letters to customers, and the Sign-Up Agreements given to customers on behalf of Meracord by the Front DSCs – including Lloyd Ward Defendants. These statements include false assurances that customers are fully “in control” of their accounts, and that Meracord will not disburse any funds without the customer’s permission, when in fact Meracord and its Front DSCs are in control of the debt settlement accounts, routinely disbursing money to themselves for unearned and illegal fees.

Meracord also falsely claims that it is not a debt settlement or “debt adjusting” company, even though it meets the statutory definition for such companies, during the relevant time period of this complaint, since it is engaged in receiving funds for the purpose of distributing said funds among creditors in payment or partial payment of obligations of a debtor.

Significantly, the online account management tool that Meracord provides (“MyPromise,” formerly called “NoteWorld Reporter”) has a section entitled “Settlements,” where customers can “get more details about [pending settlement agreements] and . . . approve or decline the proposed agreement[s].”

Customers who discover the fraudulent activities of the Meracord Enterprise find themselves fighting an uphill battle to disentangle the labyrinthine scheme and determine the party ultimately responsible for the scam. The ephemeral Front DSCs disappear, stop answering phone calls, disclaim responsibility, or resort to outright threats and intimidation; and Meracord also refuses to admit any responsibility for the fraud in which it was complicit. Indebted consumers are thus left in worse positions than if they had never sought help at all, having often paid thousands of dollars in exorbitant and illegal fees that could have gone towards reducing their debt loads.

Remsberg and Meracord profit from the fees generated by each consumer enrolled by the Front DSC members of the Enterprise, knowing that the fees are generated by fraudulent and deceptive means, and knowing that often the fees charged are flatly illegal.

The Front DSCs in the Meracord Enterprise include entities like Lloyd Ward Defendants, who have been the subject of multiple lawsuits and government investigations related to their debt settlement business:

(a) A Kansas court found that Lloyd Ward Defendants’ debt settlement practices violated the Kansas Consumer Protection Act and the Kansas Credit Services Organizations Act, harming the plaintiff in that case by causing a judgment to be entered against him and by causing him “considerable anguish, stress, and despair.” The court awarded the plaintiff $100,000 in damages ($4,347.82 for each of the twenty-three deceptive acts in which Lloyd Ward Defendants engaged), in addition to attorneys’ fees.

(b) The Connecticut Department of Banking issued a Cease and Desist Order in September 2011, requiring Lloyd Ward Defendants to pay a $500,000 civil penalty for violations of Connecticut’s statutory requirements for debt adjusters/negotiators. The violations included charging fees that the Department found to be “excessive” and engaging in debt negotiation without a license. The Department also required Lloyd Ward Defendants to specifically repay fees to a Connecticut resident who was charged excessive fees and “received no benefit” in return. When asked under oath in other litigation whether he intended to pay the fine issued by Connecticut, Ward blatantly stated, “No”. On information and belief, to this date Ward has neither appealed nor paid this fine, despite the fact that the order requires payment within thirty days.

(c) On July 29, 2010, the North Carolina Attorney General issued a cease and desist letter to the Lloyd Ward Defendants and required them to identify within ten days all North Carolina customers. On information and belief, Ward simply ignored this cease and desist letter.

(d) In February 2012, a bankruptcy trustee in Ohio brought two lawsuits against Lloyd Ward Defendants on behalf of LWA customers who had entered bankruptcy. The suits alleged violations of the Ohio Debt Adjustment Companies Act, the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act, and Fraud. Among other things, the suits allege that “LWA is in the business of lending its name to debt settlement businesses . . . to create a fiction that the services are being performed by attorneys, thereby evading consumer protections applicable to such services, including fee limitations.”

(e) In April 2012, a class-action lawsuit was filed against Lloyd Ward Defendants in Washington State Superior Court, along with SilverLeaf Debt Solutions (another of the businesses involved in the scam that injured Plaintiff Marie Johnson-Peredo). The lawsuit alleges violations of the Washington Debt Adjusting Act and the Washington Consumer Protection Act, as well as breach of fiduciary duty, on behalf of Washington customers of Lloyd Ward Defendants.

On information and belief, Lloyd Ward Defendants have received cease and desist letters from other states or state attorneys general, including West Virginia, and have ignored these inquiries.

Ward is also personally the subject of an ongoing disciplinary petition filed by the Texas Commission for Lawyer Discipline, alleging six separate violations of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct. The allegations revolve around Ward’s interactions with SilverLeaf Debt Solutions.

Lloyd Ward & Associates, P.C. currently has an “F” rating with the Better Business Bureau, based on dozens of complaints having been filed against the company in the last three years.

Like Meracord, however, Lloyd Ward Defendants actively attempt to manage their online reputations. For example, when Defendant Amanda Ward discovered that negative comments were being posted on the website www.merchantcircle.com, she immediately emailed Lloyd Ward and their business partner Kevin Devoto, writing on April 15, 2010: “This is what I was worried about!!!! We have no control over what people say and this is very bad. Can you not get us removed from this website?” In a response the same day, Mr. Devoto wrote as follows:

The good news is:

A. You can answer these.

B. But even better, it seems pretty simple to just post enough good comments to simple [sic] drive any bad ones so for [sic] Down the list that no one can find them anyway.

We just don’t want any comment like that being left alone.

FOR INSTANCE:

I personally just posted the following: dear Lloyd Ward, pls tell Kervin tbat Kelly has just been incredible for us. We really had some challenges and it’s looking like the light is appearing at the end of the tunnel. Thanks Lloyd Ward.

E-mail communications and Internet postings such as the one described above are examples of the use of the interstate wire facilities to continue and perpetuate the illicit goals of the criminal enterprise alleged herein.

Lloyd Ward Defendants profit from the fees generated by fraudulently inducing consumers to sign up for their debt settlement “services,” and profit from their association with the Meracord Enterprise by using Meracord to legitimize their services and by convincing consumers that their money will be safe in a Meracord account which only the consumer can control. In addition, because Meracord usually automatically deducts payments from the consumer’s bank account, Lloyd Ward Defendants are more likely to reap illicit gains from consumers automatically after signing them up, as opposed to a system where consumers would later – after having reviewed and contemplated the “services” being offered – have to make a separate payment.

The Front DSCs in the Meracord Enterprise also include companies such as Freedom
Debt Relief, which has had 251 complaints filed with the Better Business Bureau in the last three years and been the subject of an investigation by the Washington Attorney General which resulted in a March 3, 2011 consent decree.

The Washington State consent decree “stems from the Attorney General’s claims that Freedom Debt Relief in some cases charged consumers more than the allowed 15 percent of the total enrolled debt, taking its fees before the time permitted and failing to adequately inform consumers about how the program worked violating Washington’s debt adjusting act and consumer protection act.” As a part of the consent decree, Freedom Debt Relief agreed to pay approximately $800,000 in restitution for Washington consumers, and was forbidden from contracting with new Washington customers without notifying the Attorney General’s office.

In order to thwart regulatory actions, evade detection and continue to victimize financially distressed consumers, the Front DSCs that are members of the Meracord Enterprise regularly enter into agreements between and among themselves to transfer “portfolios” of victims. For example, in late 2010, Front DSC ‘The Debt Answer’ faced numerous complaints and regulatory issues including an investigation by the Connecticut Department of Banking.

Instead of complying with the law, The Debt Answer sold its portfolio of 3,407 “active” debt settlement victims to Ward on January 1, 2011. The Debt Answer itself had apparently earlier purchased an undisclosed number of these victims from another Front DSC, Simon & Bocksch – one of the Front DSCs involved in the scheme to defraud Plaintiff Dinah Canada, as described below.

On information and belief, Meracord facilitates these fraudulent “portfolio” transfers by wiring the unlawful fees to the new entity without any authorization from the consumer account holders, who generally remain unaware that their accounts have been transferred. In fact, on at least several occasions, Meracord account representatives have recommended such transfers upon learning that a Front DSC has encountered legal issues and “is going to be closing the doors.” By facilitating – and in some cases recommending – these wholly fraudulent transfers of “portfolios” of victims, Meracord ensures that its steady flow of unlawful fees continues.

Attorney-run Front DSCs have a special role in the Meracord Enterprise. By marketing themselves as law firms, they are perceived by consumers as more trustworthy. Attorney Front DSCs like Lloyd Ward Defendants use this false perception in their recruitment efforts.

In addition, Attorney-run Front DSC members of the Meracord Enterprise, such as Lloyd Ward Defendants, often permit the use of their names by other Front DSCs in return for a cut of their ill-gotten gains. Indeed, LWA went so far as to have a formal “Affiliate Agreement,” which expressly permitted affiliated Front DSCs to “use LWA and any images, likeness, reference, web site and web site material belonging to LWA or other items developed by LWA for purposes of marketing and advertising,” in return for a substantial cut of the profits.

In addition to gaining consumers’ trust by affiliating with a law firm, non-attorney Front DSC’s often affiliate with an attorney-run Front DSC in order to evade regulations in states that prohibit debt settlement. Such states often have exceptions for practicing attorneys, such that by spuriously affiliating itself with a law firm, a non-attorney Front DSC may extend the period during which it can avoid regulatory scrutiny. As a former employee of The Debt Answer testified in other litigation: “The Debt Answer marketed to certain states while Lloyd Ward & Associates was brought in to be able to get the states that we couldn’t market in under The Debt Answer.”

Front DSCs also coordinate and communicate directly with each other through the formation of industry trade associations whose primary purpose is to spread misleading information about the debt settlement industry and issue bogus “certifications” to Front DSCs. Front DSCs then use these bogus certifications to convince consumers that their activities are legitimate. The following is an actual Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) from the website of one of these bogus trade associations, the United States Organizations for Bankruptcy Alternatives, Inc.:

Why do the Debt Settlement Companies I am researching seem to all have failing grades with the Better Business Bureau (BBB)?

In an unfortunate turn of events, the BBB recently implemented a new ‘scoring model’. This scoring model dictates that certain industries be graded as a whole. Unfortunately in the case of debt settlement companies, this model is quite severe, and has any company, regardless of their best-practices operations or good track record, restricted from achieving any rating above C-, USOBA supports the theory behind the BBB; a consumer should have a resource to compare companies in any industry based on the company’s merits alone. At this time, the BBB ratings of Debt Settlement companies tells a consumer little or nothing about a company’s ethics or reputability. Several USOBA members and other Debt Settlement entities were asked to “give back” prestigious awards and achievements such as the BBB Accreditation and BBB Torch Award. Prior to the scoring model change, the companies were exemplary in the eyes of the BBB. If you wish to include the BBB in your research of a Debt Settlement provider, we suggest you look carefully at the complaint resolution and not the arbitrary score.

As the above allegations make clear, the Front DSCs that are part of the Meracord Enterprise are directly connected to each other through bogus trade associations as well as the formal and informal agreements described above. Thus, the Meracord Enterprise involves relationships between Meracord and the individual Front DSCs as well as relationships between and among the Front DSCs themselves – all evidenced by both the participation of Meracord Enterprise members in industry-wide events and trade associations, as well as the formal and informal agreements made among those members.

The Meracord conspiracy is a classic hub-and-spoke conspiracy which also involves relationships between the various spokes. Meracord serves as the hub of the Meracord Enterprise, entering into bilateral relationships with each Front DSC, through which Meracord both directly engages in and facilitates the fraudulent and illegal activity of the Meracord Enterprise, as alleged herein. As discussed above, Meracord also causes and assists the various “spokes” – the Front DSCs – in communicating with and conspiring with each other, all for the common benefit of the Meracord Enterprise and to the common detriment of its victims, whose accounts are involuntarily shifted from one dubious Front DSC to another, with Meracord’s indispensable assistance, in order to hinder regulatory protective actions. These relationships between Front DSCs, many of which are facilitated by Meracord, benefit and advance the Meracord Enterprise as a whole. Other relationships between the Front DSCs include their bogus trade associations and countless conspiratorial interactions between such Front DSCs at various debt settlement industry functions, including those attended and sponsored by Meracord.

Much More

The complaint filed contains significantly more material and for those interested in reading the full complaint, you can read it here.

Update November 21, 2012

A tipster (send in your tips here) forwarded me a copy of a recent court document in this case that provides additional details.

Statement of the nature and complexity of the case

Plaintiff’s Position

Meracord (formerly NoteWorld, LLC) is the hub of a criminal enterprise which preys on unsuspecting and vulnerable consumers who seek only to resolve their personal debt crisis and get back on their financial feet. Meracord engages and relies upon a network of “front-end” debt settlement companies (“Front DSCs”) that it utilizes to recruit customers; among those Front DSCs are the various entities controlled by the Lloyd Ward Defendants (hereinafter “Lloyd Ward & Associates” or “LWA”). The Front DSCs offer to act as intermediaries between distressed and distraught debtors and their creditors, using inflated claims and misrepresentations about their services to sign up customers, and charging exorbitant and abusive fees once the mark is on the hook. The Front DSCs require customers to set up an escrow account into which the customer makes a monthly deposit, generally via an automatic electronic funds transfer.

These accounts are administered by Meracord, which is a “back-end” debt settlement company. In theory, once a sufficient balance accumulates in the escrow account, the Front DSCs will approach creditors and utilize the accumulated balance to settle outstanding debts for a lump sum in return for fees that are strictly regulated by law.

The reality, however, is very different. Meracord represents to consumers that it is independent and unaffiliated with the Front DSCs and that consumers will at all times have control over their money. These statements are false. In fact, Meracord is deeply intertwined with and actively conspires with the Front DSCs.

Indeed, Meracord actually disburses the abusive fees to the Front DSCs and for most of the Front DSCs, Meracord provides the software through which consumers view their account balances and “approve or decline” the settlement agreements with their creditors. This software in many cases represents the bulk of the “services” that the Front DSC actually provides.

Contrary to Meracord’s assurances, it does not act as an independent fiduciary. Instead, together with its network of Front DSCs, it loots customers’ escrow accounts by withdrawing exorbitant and abusive fees pursuant to debt settlement contracts that are wholly fraudulent and known to Meracord to be so. Moreover, the contracts, as well as the fees charged by both Meracord and the Front DSCs, are illegal under Washington State laws regulating the debt settlement industry. In many cases, as a result of the exorbitant fees charged, it is impossible for the consumer to ever accumulate sufficient funds for his or her debts to be settled as promised. If consumers discover the fraud and attempt to retrieve the illegally extracted fees, they often find that the Front DSC is nothing more than a shell entity with no real address and no discernible ownership structure. Even if the Front DSC exists, however, the company often refuses to return any of the customers’ fees, falsely claiming – as Lloyd Ward & Associates did in Plaintiff Johnson-Peredo’s case – to have “earned” the fees. Meracord, for its part, stonewalls customers and refuses to refund illegal fees, hiding behind false claims that it “only” provides “payment processing” services; that it is “not a debt settlement company”; and that it is wholly “independent” from the vanishing Front DSCs.

Meracord’s claim that it is not a debt settlement or “debt adjusting” company is particularly outrageous, since it clearly met the statutory definition for such companies during the relevant time period. Moreover, the online account management tool that Meracord provides for customers specifically has a section entitled “Settlements,” where customers can “get more details about [pending settlement agreements] and … approve or decline the proposed agreement[s].”

Attorney-run Front DSCs have a special role in the Meracord Enterprise. By marketing themselves as law firms, they are perceived by consumers as more trustworthy. Attorney Front DSCs like Lloyd Ward & Associates use this false perception in their recruitment efforts.

Lloyd Ward & Associates is one of the Front DSCs that actively and knowingly perpetuates the scheme by which Meracord and its Front DSCs defraud consumers. LWA – along with a byzantine web of related corporate entities – is controlled by Defendant Lloyd Ward, an attorney licensed in Texas and Arkansas. According to its website, LWA is a law firm established in 1992 and located in Dallas, Texas. In addition to other practice areas, the firm publicizes a Debt Settlement practice and touts its “relationships with creditors” who “realize that we are working as diligently as they are to negotiate a debt settlement and remove it from their books.”

LWA’s website falsely advertises that its debt negotiation service is “guaranteed in writing to work or your fees will be returned!” As Plaintiff Marie Johnson-Peredo’s experience illustrates, however, LWA’s advertised “guarantee” is just another part of the scheme to sign consumers up for worthless debt settlement “services.”

Marie was approached by a LWA representative after seeking help online for the $35,000 credit card debt she had accumulated with Discover Bank over five years of helping to support her family. The LWA representative emphasized her status as a “professional debt arbitrator,” and promised that LWA could settle Marie’s debts for approximately 40% of the total amount owed. LWA instructed Marie to change her contact information with Discover to LWA’s address and phone number, and to stop making payments to Discover, and instead begin making payments into her new Meracord escrow account. LWA led Marie to believe that the law firm would be “stepping into her shoes” with respect to her Discover accounts, and would henceforth handle all interactions with the creditor. But when, approximately 14 months later, Marie was sued by Discover on the accounts, LWA refused to do anything to assist her. Moreover, the firm refused to return the over $3,500 in illegal “fees” that Meracord had disbursed to LWA from Marie’s escrow account. LWA claims it had “earned” the fees, despite refusing to provide Marie with any proof that it had in fact done anything to settle her debts.

Plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) and Washington state law to remedy Defendants’ illegal conduct. Plaintiffs bring this action on behalf of themselves and a Class consisting of all persons in the United States who established an account with Meracord LLC (or any subsidiary thereof) from which Meracord processed any payments related to any debt settlement program.

Defendants acted – and continue to act – in concert with each other and other Front DSCs to perpetuate an unfair, deceptive, and fraudulent business scheme injurious to consumers and violative of RICO, Washington’s debt adjusting statute, WASH. REV. CODE § 18.28, and the Washington Consumer Protection Act, WASH. REV. CODE § 19.86.

Defendants’ attempts to compel arbitration of the claims in this case are ill-founded. This Court has once already rejected Meracord’s contention that it can compel arbitration based upon dubious arbitration clauses in the Front DSC’s “agreements.” Its appeal of this Court’s ruling in that regard is fully briefed before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Meracord’s own “Terms & Conditions” document actually requires Plaintiffs to pursue this lawsuit in court in Washington, which is exactly what they have done. The Ward Defendants’ attempt to compel arbitration is as dubious as is its “contract.” As outlined in the Amended Complaint, the Ward Defendants’ arbitration clause is not enforceable.

Meracord Defendants’ Position

Plaintiffs assert various claims against the Meracord Defendants arising out of their decision to hire debt settlement companies (“DSCs”) to assist them in settling their consumer debt. Plaintiffs’ claims arise out of and relate to the debt settlement services they hired the DSCs to provide, or are derivative of their contractual relationships with the DSCs. Plaintiffs’ attempt to proceed against the Meracord Defendants on these claims rests on vague allegations of collusion between Meracord, LLC (“Meracord”) and the DSCs. Plaintiffs ultimately seek to hold the Meracord Defendants liable for the alleged conduct of the DSCs, seeking to recover from the Meracord Defendants the fees they paid to the DSCs pursuant to their DSC Contracts, rather than limiting their claims to the nominal fees paid to Meracord under their “Sign-Up Agreement” with Meracord. Plaintiffs make no claim that Meracord negligently performed its payment processing services in connection with Plaintiffs’ debt settlement efforts.

Plaintiffs’ DSC Contracts contain unambiguous, broadly-worded arbitration agreements. Specifically, Plaintiff Canada’s DSC Contract requires arbitration of “any controversy, claim or dispute between the parties arising out of or relating to this Agreement;” Plaintiff Johnson-Peredo’s DSC Contract requires arbitration of “all disputes arising under or related to this agreement;” and Plaintiff Hewson’s DSC Contract requires arbitration of “any litigation arising out of or relating to this Agreement.”

Furthermore, the arbitration agreements in the DSC Contracts of Plaintiff Canada and Plaintiff Johnson-Peredo both state that such arbitration will be conducted according to the rules of the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”), which commit “arbitrability” disputes to the jurisdiction of the arbitrator. Pursuant to these arbitration agreements, the Meracord Defendants have moved (a) to stay this litigation and compel arbitration of Plaintiffs’ claims, or to dismiss those claims pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1) or 12(b)(3), or alternatively (b) to stay this litigation pending resolution of (i) the arbitration between Plaintiff Johnson-Peredo and the Ward Defendants (as requested in the Ward Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss), and (ii) the pending appeal in Rajagopalan v. NoteWorld LLC, No. 12-35205 (9th Cir.), which involves an arbitration agreement substantially similar to the arbitration agreements signed by Plaintiffs Canada and Hewson, as well as similar legal issues. Meracord was formerly known as NoteWorld LLC. The lawsuit in Rajagopalan, which is being litigated between Plaintiffs’ counsel and Meracord, asserts essentially the same allegations against Meracord as Plaintiffs assert against the Meracord Defendants in this action. This Court denied Meracord’s motion to compel arbitration in that case, on the ground that the arbitration agreement in the plaintiff’s DSC Contract is substantively unconscionable and that Meracord could not invoke the arbitration agreement as a nonsignatory to the DSC Contract. As the arbitration agreement in Rajagapolan is virtually identical to the arbitration agreements in the DSC Contracts of Plaintiffs Canada and Hewson, the decision in Rajagapolan should be highly relevant in determining the similar issues presented by their claims. If the Ward Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is granted with respect to the claims of Plaintiff Johnson-Peredo, that arbitration should result in a binding determination of her claims.

The Meracord Defendants contend that all discovery, other than initial disclosures, should be stayed until after resolution of its pending motion to stay litigation and compel arbitration, to avoid the parties incurring significant discovery expenses that may be rendered unnecessary should the Meracord Defendants prevail on their motion to stay litigation and compel arbitration.

If arbitration is not compelled or a stay is not granted, the Meracord Defendants intend to move to dismiss Plaintiffs’ claims for, inter alia, failure to state a claim, and to seek a stay of discovery pending resolution of that motion to dismiss. In the event that motion to dismiss also is denied, proceedings in this putative nationwide class action likely will be complex. A significant threshold discovery issue will be whether discovery should be bifurcated between class certification and merits issues.

Ward Defendants’ Position

Plaintiffs allege the Ward Defendants are one of scores of “DSCs” who allegedly have conspired with the Meracord defendants to assist plaintiffs in settling their debts. Plaintiffs ultimately seek to hold the Ward Defendants liable for all fees paid by a putative nationwide class, including fees paid to the Meracord Defendants, other DSCs, and other entities.

The only plaintiff who contracted with one of the Ward Defendants is Marie Johnson- Peredo. She is a resident of Pennsylvania and concedes the Ward Defendants are all located in Texas. The contract contains an arbitration clause requiring that any disputes arising under the contract are subject to binding arbitration. The contract also provides that venue for arbitration shall be in Dallas County, Texas.

The Ward Defendants have moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ amended complaint on the grounds that this Court lacks personal jurisdiction over the Ward Defendants, lacks subject matter jurisdiction due to the arbitration clause, and venue does not lie in Washington.

The Ward Defendants agree with the Meracord defendants that all discovery, other than initial disclosures, should be stayed until after resolution of the Ward Defendants’ pending motion to dismiss and the Meracord defendants’ pending motion to stay litigation and compel arbitration, to avoid the parties incurring significant discovery expenses that may be rendered unnecessary should the Ward Defendants prevail on their motion to dismiss and/or the Meracord Defendants prevail on their motion to stay litigation and compel arbitration.

If these pending motions are denied, the Ward Defendants intend to move to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims for, inter alia, failure to state a claim, and to seek a stay of discovery pending resolution of that motion to dismiss. In the event that motion to dismiss also is denied, proceedings in this putative nationwide class action likely will be complex. The Ward Defendants concur with the Meracord Defendants that a significant threshold discovery issue will be whether discovery should be bifurcated between class certification and merits issues.

Like this:

Last step, fill out the information below or call us for Priority Assistance.

What may we help you with?

How much do you owe?

What is the status of your payments?

What type of student loans do you have?

What is the status of your loans?

What type of tax debt do you have?

How many years have you owed taxes?

Are you currently enrolled in a payment program with the IRS?

What problems are you having with your report?

Late Payments

Bankruptcy

Charge offs

Debts that are not yours

Collections

Errors on your credit report

Other

first_name

Your first name is required.Your first name is required to be at least 2 characters.Your first name cannot be longer than 50 characters.

last_name

Your last name is required.Your last name is required to be at least 2 characters.Your last name cannot be longer than 50 characters.

email

Your email is required.

primary_phone

Your phone is required.Your 10 digit phone number is required.

state

Your state is required.

age

Your age is required.Your age must be between 18 and 99.Your age must be greater than 18.Your age must be less than 100.

I agree to the terms below.

By clicking on the "Contact Me" button above, you consent, acknowledge, and agree to the following: Our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and to receive electronic communications. We take your privacy seriously. That you are providing express "written" consent for Debt.com or appropriate service provider(s) to call you (including through automated means; e.g. autodialing, text and pre-recorded messaging) via telephone, mobile device (including SMS and MMS - charges may apply), even if
your telephone number is currently listed on any internal, corporate, state or federal Do-Not-Call list. Consent is not required as a condition to utilize Debt.com services and you are under no obligation to purchase anything.

By clicking on the “Contact me” button above, you consent, acknowledge, and agree to the following: (1)That you are providing express “written” consent for Lexington Law Firm, Debt.com or appropriate service provider(s) to call you (including through automated means; e.g. autodialing, text and pre-recorded messaging) via telephone, mobile device (including SMS and MMS – charges may apply), or dialed
manually, at my residential or cellular number, even if your telephone number is currently listed on any internal, corporate, state or federal Do-Not-Call list; and (2)Lexington Law’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Use and Debt.com’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Consent is not required as a condition to utilize Lexington Law or Debt.com services and you are under no obligation to purchase anything.

Site Search

Ask for Debt Help

Last step, fill out the information below or call us for Priority Assistance.

What may we help you with?

How much do you owe?

What is the status of your payments?

What type of student loans do you have?

What is the status of your loans?

What type of tax debt do you have?

How many years have you owed taxes?

Are you currently enrolled in a payment program with the IRS?

What problems are you having with your report?

Late Payments

Bankruptcy

Charge offs

Debts that are not yours

Collections

Errors on your credit report

Other

first_name

Your first name is required.Your first name is required to be at least 2 characters.Your first name cannot be longer than 50 characters.

last_name

Your last name is required.Your last name is required to be at least 2 characters.Your last name cannot be longer than 50 characters.

email

Your email is required.

primary_phone

Your phone is required.Your 10 digit phone number is required.

state

Your state is required.

age

Your age is required.Your age must be between 18 and 99.Your age must be greater than 18.Your age must be less than 100.

I agree to the terms below.

By clicking on the "Contact Me" button above, you consent, acknowledge, and agree to the following: Our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and to receive electronic communications. We take your privacy seriously. That you are providing express "written" consent for Debt.com or appropriate service provider(s) to call you (including through automated means; e.g. autodialing, text and pre-recorded messaging) via telephone, mobile device (including SMS and MMS - charges may apply), even if
your telephone number is currently listed on any internal, corporate, state or federal Do-Not-Call list. Consent is not required as a condition to utilize Debt.com services and you are under no obligation to purchase anything.

By clicking on the “Contact me” button above, you consent, acknowledge, and agree to the following: (1)That you are providing express “written” consent for Lexington Law Firm, Debt.com or appropriate service provider(s) to call you (including through automated means; e.g. autodialing, text and pre-recorded messaging) via telephone, mobile device (including SMS and MMS – charges may apply), or dialed
manually, at my residential or cellular number, even if your telephone number is currently listed on any internal, corporate, state or federal Do-Not-Call list; and (2)Lexington Law’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Use and Debt.com’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Consent is not required as a condition to utilize Lexington Law or Debt.com services and you are under no obligation to purchase anything.